Professor Sue Cotton

As a National Health and Medical Research Council Career Development Fellow, Sue’s current work is focused on measuring change and progress in young people with mental illness, and particularly those with first episode psychosis, in order to improve outcomes.

Sue is also currently involved in a number of different therapeutic trials for psychiatric disorders such as first episode psychosis, personality disorder, bipolar disorder and substance use.

Before coming to Orygen, Sue worked in research positions in academic, allied health and mental health settings. She has had leadership roles in the evaluation of youth mental health services and the development of new research programs and clinical trials in youth mental health.

Orygen acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the lands we are on and pays respect to their Elders past and present. Orygen recognises and respects their cultural heritage, beliefs and relationship to their ancestral lands, which continue to be important to The First Nations Peoples living today.

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Orygen currently only operate clinical services in the north and north west of Melbourne through our headspace centres.

If you need to access a clinical service and you live in another part of Australia, you can access a range of services through the headspace centres operating around Australia. Visit www.headspace.org.au for more information.

If you are looking for Orygen Youth Health operated by Melbourne Health, please note that this is known as Orygen. You can visit www.oyh.org.au or for referrals call their triage service 1800 888 320.